Reply 1 of 8, by Mau1wurf1977
- Rank
- l33t++
How can you tell if it's fake?
Reply 2 of 8, by Pingaloka
- Rank
- Member
Because the cache chips are solded directly into the board, there is no socket. But I'm no expert, I'm doubting...
Reply 3 of 8, by keropi
- Rank
- l33t++
they look fine to me... soldered chips doesn't necessarily mean fake chips...
Reply 4 of 8, by carlostex
- Rank
- l33t
^ What he said
Reply 5 of 8, by Pingaloka
- Rank
- Member
wrote:they look fine to me... soldered chips doesn't necessarily mean fake chips...
Oh, I thought that no socket meant fake cache chips!
Reply 6 of 8, by Jolaes76
FYKI,
the usual bad omens:
- "Write Back" labelling without serial numbers on soldered "chips"
- post screen shows "Write Back cache ON"
- no option to change L2 in CMOS, it is already disabled, greyed-out
Your cache modules may be fully workable, although not easily expandable.
"Ita in vita ut in lusu alae pessima iactura arte corrigenda est."
Reply 7 of 8, by GeorgeMan
- Rank
- Oldbie
Try speedsys and see the cache performance for yourself 😉
Acer Helios Neo 16 | i7-13700HX | 64G DDR5 | RTX 4070M | 32" AOC 75Hz 2K IPS + 17" DEC CRT 1024x768 @ 85Hz
Win11 + Virtualization => Emudeck @consoles | pcem @DOS~Win95 | Virtualbox @Win98SE & softGPU | VMware @2K&XP | ΕΧΟDΟS
Reply 8 of 8, by Pingaloka
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- Member
thanx guys!
